Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes) may be a safer alternative to conventional cigarettes and are available in a broad range of nicotine strengths. The overall goal of this project is to use an experimental analogue of the real-world tobacco marketplace to examine the effects of nicotine strength on e-cigarette consumption and the likelihood that current smokers will either switch to e-cigarettes (which may reduce harm) or use both products in combination (which may increase harm). Testing effects of e-cigarette nicotine strength under controlled conditions in a context that models the real world will facilitate evidence-based policies that have a net benefit to health.


Clinical Trial Description

The goal of tobacco regulation is to reduce tobacco-related harm and improve public health. Improving public health in this way requires thorough understanding of the processes underlying purchasing and consumption of the various products available in the complex tobacco marketplace. One product feature eligible for regulation is the nicotine content in electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes). At present, little research has experimentally examined the influence of nicotine strength on e-cigarette consumption and the likelihood that current cigarette smokers will switch to e-cigarettes (i.e., product substitution). In the absence of such evidence, regulation designed to restrict available e-cigarette nicotine strength may have unanticipated consequences. This project will utilize an innovative method, the Experimental Tobacco Marketplace, to provide estimates of the effects of e-cigarette nicotine strength on tobacco consumption and the degree to which e-cigarette products serve as functional substitutes for cigarettes. In so doing, this project will provide rigorous tests of a novel quantitative model able to account for e-cigarette substitution effects, including effects of nicotine strength. This model, which assumes that product substitution is directly influenced by the nicotine content of tobacco products relative to their prices (a phenomenon called unit price), provides a framework that may be used to generate novel predictions and guide regulatory efforts. This project will examine the effects of four e-cigarette nicotine strengths (3, 6, 12, and 24 mg/mL) on the degree to which e-liquid substitutes for conventional cigarettes in the Experimental Tobacco Marketplace. This project will examine these effects in: a) exclusive cigarette smokers with minimal prior e-cigarette experience, and b) dual cigarette smokers/e-cigarette users. Together, the findings from this project may be used to inform regulatory action and will improve understanding of the role of nicotine strength in determining the extent to which e-cigarettes serve as functional substitutes for conventional cigarettes. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03843047
Study type Interventional
Source Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date March 1, 2019
Completion date September 30, 2021

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT04043728 - Addressing Psychological Risk Factors Underlying Smoking Persistence in COPD Patients: The Fresh Start Study N/A
Recruiting NCT06033599 - Motivational Interviewing and Mindfulness-Oriented Recovery Enhancement Phase 3
Enrolling by invitation NCT05415371 - Persistent Poverty Counties Pregnant Women With Medicaid N/A
Completed NCT04284813 - Families With Substance Use and Psychosis: A Pilot Study N/A
Completed NCT06105424 - BRP1602: Evaluation of Technical and Logistical Feasibility to Measure Lung Permeability N/A
Completed NCT01311830 - Enhancing Smoker Utilization of the Minnesota Quitline Through Support Persons N/A
Completed NCT04566198 - Smoking in the Paris Fire Brigade and Comparison According to the Type of Service (Permanent or On-call)
Completed NCT04107779 - Changes in Biomarkers of Cigarette Smoke Exposure After Switching Either Exclusively or Partly to JUUL ENDS N/A
Completed NCT05092919 - The Effect of Sweet Flavoring on the Rewarding and Reinforcing Value of Cigarillo Use Among Young Adults Early Phase 1
Terminated NCT05274217 - Journey of Transformation Curriculum for Native American Adolescents N/A
Enrolling by invitation NCT06042361 - Enhancing Equity in Smoke-free Housing N/A
Withdrawn NCT03352635 - Mechanisms of Ethnic/Racial Differences in Lung Cancer Due to Cigarette Smoking Clinical and Biomarkers Core N/A
Completed NCT03235713 - EMA for Tobacco Control Policy Research
Completed NCT03151421 - Air Quality Feedback to Reduce Second-hand Smoke (SHS) Exposure in the Home N/A
Completed NCT03446170 - Effect of Cigarette Pack Warnings and Packaging Among Young Adult Smokers N/A
Completed NCT04104152 - CSD190203: A Study to Determine Subject Puffing Patterns of an Electronic Nicotine Delivery System in an Ambulatory Setting N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT05999383 - Understanding the Clinical Pharmacology of Marijuana-Tobacco Co-administration Phase 2
Recruiting NCT04429568 - THC Crossover Study N/A
Completed NCT04632030 - Shrinking the Size of the Tobacco Power Wall N/A
Completed NCT04143256 - Evaluating Selected Constituents in the Exhaled Breath Samples N/A